Contemporary Opera in Flux

Edited by Yayoi U Everett

Subjects: Music, Musicology
Paperback : 9780472056262, 348 pages, 40 figures, 4 tables, 6 x 9, October 2024
Hardcover : 9780472076260, 348 pages, 40 figures, 4 tables, 6 x 9, October 2024
Open Access : 9780472903580, 348 pages, 40 figures, 4 tables, 6 x 9, October 2024
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A collection of essays examining operas that push the conventional boundaries of opera and advance the work of underrepresented composers

Table of contents

Table of Contents
List of Illustrations
Acknowledgements
Foreword by Susan McClary
Introduction by Yayoi U. Everett and Nicholas D. Stevens
Chapter 1: Nicholas D. Stevens, “Fear of an Envoiced Planet: Speculative Arias of the (Post)operatic Hyperobject”
Chapter 2: Jelena Novak, “Opera in the Expanded Field: Singing Beyond Human”
Chapter 3: Ryan Ebright, “Steve Reich’s The Cave, Theater of Testimony, and the Documentary Turn in America Opera”
Chapter 4: Amy Bauer, “¡Unicamente La Verdad! (Only the Truth!): Camelia la Tejana’s Many Truths”
Chapter 5: Alexander K. Rothe, “Gesture and Dramaturgy of the Avatar in George Lewis’s Afterword”
Chapter 6: Joy H. Calico, “Modes of Engagement with Experimental Opera: Chaya Czernowin’s Infinite Now as Case Study”
Chapter 7: Nancy Yunhwa Rao, “Inter-Asia Sensibility—Tan Dun’s Tea: A Mirror of Soul”
Chapter 8: Colleen Renihan, “Of Sense and Sirens: Ana Sokolović’s Svadba and Six Voix Pour Sirènes”
Chapter 9: Jane I. Forner, “Sex, Sin, and Myth: Reclaiming the ‘Dark Feminine’ in Anthony Davis’s Lilith (2009)”
Chapter 10: Edward Venn, “Narratives of the Self in Thomas Hyde’s That Man Stephen Ward”
Chapter 11: Yayoi U. Everett, “Narrative Agencies in Annie Proulx and Charles Wuorinen’s Brokeback Mountain (2014)”
Chapter 12: Mauro Fosco Bertola, “From Subjectivity to Biopolitics: The Dream in Salvatore Sciarrino’s Music Theatre”
Bibliography
Author biography

Description

In twelve essays, Contemporary Opera in Flux discusses a series of shifts that, taken together, have radically redefined the production and reception of opera. Focusing on productions involving late twentieth- and twenty-first century scores and libretti, the contributors draw on conversations with members of creative teams and studies of archival material, dipping into a historical record that remains in flux as composers, librettists, directors, and designers revisit existing work and create anew. The contributors to this volume push the boundaries of contemporary opera scholarship by examining works that disrupt operatic conventions; tackle sociopolitical issues such as drug trafficking, racial injustice, and cultural trauma; and advance underrepresented works by female, African-American, Asian, and avant-garde composers around the globe. 

Contemporary Opera in Flux bridges the gaps between expanding literature on opera, theater, new music, postmodern dramaturgy, and posthuman aesthetics, while also confronting larger questions of identity, representation, and narrative agency that are at the forefront of contemporary music scholarship. This collection of essays engages critically with the past out of a conviction that, amid general public perceptions of opera as anachronistic or elitist, contemporary opera has emerged as an artistic incubator for experimentation.

Yayoi U. Everett is a Professor of Music at CUNY Hunter College and the Graduate Center.

“If I were asked to describe the strengths of Contemporary Opera in Flux in a single word, I would volunteer ‘inclusive.’ The volume brings together a diverse range of recent operas, some well-known, some unfamiliar. In so doing, it demonstrates that contemporary opera is centrally concerned with urgent issues involving sexuality, race, nationality, and the environment.”

- Arman Schwartz, University of Notre Dame

Contemporary Opera in Flux is a pioneering study of multifaceted aspects of late-20th- and 21st-century opera. It explores such cutting-edge topics as vocality beyond human voice; influences of virtual reality and digital media on opera during the pandemic era and beyond; multicultural activism in the wake of the ‘post-George Floyd era’; and the elusive corporeal reality of human bodies saturated by media representations. Versatile topics and virtuosic quality of this collection will be a landmark in the scholarship on the interdisciplinary studies of contemporary opera. Furthermore, its writing style in many chapters is not too erudite that it will be stimulating to the general public.”

- Jeongwon Joe, University of Cincinnati’s College-Conservatory of Music